Riding the Internet Bookmobile
Salon rides along with Brewster Kahle in the Internet Bookmobile, a van that’s equipped with a high-speed wireless Internet connection, a powerful printer, and a binding machine. They’re visiting schools, museums, and libraries, printing out hard copies of public-domain books for free. “In a print-o
Dylan Tweney
1 min read
News vs. news
Winer writes, vis a vis Google News, that “4000 pubs all reporting the same story is 4000 times more boring than one.” You could make the same claim about weblogs, but we’ll let that ride for now. What’s interesting to me about Google is that it can uncover new things — new publishers as well […]
Dylan Tweney
1 min read
Web Services: Sun vs. Microsoft
According to a press release from research firm Evans Data, next year 63% of developers expect to be using Microsoft’s .Net, while 61% expect to use Java. Almost all of them will be using Web services in some form (87%, compared to 57% this year).
RSS and news aggregators
Winer has a short, simple explanation of what news aggregators are. Now all we need is a similarly clear and simple explanation of RSS. (All I could find were pretty technical pages for RSS 1.0 and RSS 2.0 (the latter link is not working this morning, however).
Dock lockout ends
Pres. Bush got a court order yesterday to reopen West Coast ports, putting a temporary hold on the labor dispute that’s simmered there for more than a week. The thing that gets me about this is that, first, the Pacific Maritime Association (the shippers) lock out the workers. So it’s an owner-initia
Dylan Tweney
1 min read
Go, Larry, go!
The Supreme Court will hear arguments in Eldred v. Ashcroft today, in order to decide whether the 1998 extension of copyright (to the life of the author plus 70 years) is constitutional or not. Lawrence Lessig is representing the good guys. Transcripts should be available in 10 days; the Supreme Cou
Web site credibility
Some researchers at the “Stanford Persuasive Technology Lab” have compiled ten useful tips for making your web site look respectable. (thanks, Tom Negrino)
Microsoft Content Management Server
Content Management Server 2002 will retail for $42,000 per processor. Companies running multi-processor servers could pay considerably more for the product. “
Internet radio lives
Compromise legislation passed by the House yesterday sets Internet radio royalty rates at a reasonable level for small broadcasters. “The parties ultimately agreed to a deal that would let small Webcasters pay a percentage of their revenues to labels and artists, instead of a flat per-song fee.” Her
War makes me sick
From Shava Nerad: If every person drew the phrase “War Makes Me Sick” on a piece of paper and taped it in their back window, or their bike basket, or put it in their front window, maybe it would be more clear what disgust we have for what’s going on. Read more, and if you […]